Your comment is not correct. The intend to reside relates to the application and granting of citizenship (not to the oath itself) and it is binding to the requirement of "intending to reside" - you can not apply unless you intend to reside. The intend to reside is binding from the moment a person applies for citizenship until forever after granting of citizenship, unless the requirement is repealed, which is what C-6 is set to do. Anyone who applied with intent to reside will not be subject to it once C-6 becomes law, as the change is retroactive (so those who were bound to it will be free of it and can abandon Canada for any reason). In fact, this is true for people who have already obtained citizenship under C-24 or applied under C-24 and have not been granted citizenship yet. Also, the "intend to reside" is not the same as forever reside in Canada. The "intend to reside" is based on the applicant's conditions at the time of application, but those conditions can change. You may intend to reside in Canada today, but not in 2 or 3 years. A compelling reason to abandon Canada later on will suffice to not have your citizenship taken away (people wonder if they can go to school abroad, and sure they can). Moreover, there was already a requirement to remain in Canada while citizenship was processed, even before C-24; therefore, you have erroneously explained the reason for C-24's intend to reside.